RE: Atheist Bible Study 1: Genesis
October 14, 2018 at 7:45 pm
(This post was last modified: October 14, 2018 at 7:45 pm by vulcanlogician.)
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Atheist Bible Study 1: Genesis
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(October 14, 2018 at 7:41 pm)Belaqua Wrote:(October 14, 2018 at 5:49 pm)Grandizer Wrote: Let's have a Bible study for atheists. Up to you. There's no particular theme in mind. I'm just assuming a literal reading of the text, but you go about it however you want. (October 14, 2018 at 8:01 pm)Belaqua Wrote: Understood! Have fun y'all. I was being facetious there. I'm interested in having a discussion about the text from all angles, really. Since the literalist interpretation is taken seriously by so many, I think it deserves to be addressed. But I think a good discussion could be had about the myth-value of stories like Adam and Eve. In some respects, the story might even be saying something pertinent about our predicament as moral agents: "Before we attained knowledge of good and evil, we were not 'cursed' to be morally responsible beings as we are now etc..."
If "adam and eve" are not taken literally then who the fuck needs jesus to save mankind from their "sin?" I think the literalists are shitheads but the fact is they are the ones who understand the story. It's the allegorists who do not have a leg to stand on.
(October 14, 2018 at 8:06 pm)Grandizer Wrote:(October 14, 2018 at 7:41 pm)Belaqua Wrote: When you get a chance, could you let us know how you'd like to proceed? I'm a big fan of using stories like this. Here's the advice I like, even though it's kind of old: Socrates and Phaedrus are walking along outside the walls of Athens. Phaedrus asks if this is the location where Boreas the wind god abducted a girl. Socrates answers: ____________ Socrates: No, this isn’t the place. It’s about two or three stades* downstream, where one crosses to go towards Agra.* There’s an altar of Boreas somewhere there. Phaedrus: I’ve not really noticed it. But tell me, Socrates, by Zeus:* do you think this story is true? Socrates: It wouldn’t be odd for me to doubt it as the experts do. I might give a clever explanation of it, and say that a gust of wind from the north pushed her from the nearby rocks while she was playing with Pharmaceia, and although this caused her death she was said to have been abducted by Boreas––either from here or from the Areopagus,* since there’s another version of the story, that she was abducted from there, not here. Basically, Phaedrus, although I find these kinds of interpretations fascinating, they are the work of someone who is too clever for his own good. He has to work hard and is rather unfortunate, if only because he next has to correct the way Centaurs look, and then the Chimaera, and then there pours down on him a horde of similar creatures, like the Gorgon and Pegasus and countless other extraordinary beasts with all kinds of monstrous natures.*† If anyone has doubts about these creatures and wants to use a rough-and-ready kind of ingenuity to force each of them to conform with probability, he’ll need a lot of spare time. As for me, I never have time to spend on these things, and there’s a good reason for this, my friend: I am still incapable of obeying the Delphic inscription and knowing myself.* It strikes me as absurd to look into matters that have nothing to do with me as long as I’m still ignorant in this respect, so I ignore all these matters and go along with the traditional views about them. As I said just now, I investigate myself rather than these things, to see whether I am in fact a creature of more complexity and savagery than Typhon, or something tamer and more simple, with a naturally divine and non-Typhonic nature. But anyway, my friend, if I may interrupt our conversation, isn’t this the tree you were taking us to? Phaedrus: Yes, this is the one. (October 14, 2018 at 7:17 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: Great thread. I'm going with extended diarrhea shit, very noisy, very projectile. And now we have the cosmic microwave background radiation that you can still hear today.
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental.
(October 14, 2018 at 5:49 pm)Grandizer Wrote: Let's have a Bible study for atheists. After reading a particular passage from the Bible, I will be sharing my thoughts on it in threads like this. Feel free to share your thoughts on any verse or passage in the book that this thread corresponds to. Theists, of course, can chime in as well. Based on a suggestion sent to me via PM, I'll be including a link to the Bible passage under discussion every time I make these posts. So here's a link to Genesis 1:1-2:3. Now continuing from the OP: The next day, God makes a vault that separates the water above it from the water below it. This vault he calls the sky. Now I'm not sure exactly why the ancients believed that there was a mass of water above the vault, but I'm guessing it was their attempt to explain the fall of rain from the sky, or shall I say, from above the sky. And in fact, in a later passage in Genesis, it seems like this is what they actually did believe. They weren't completely wrong here, but the scientific answer is that rain results from the clouds within the sky. To be fair to them, they didn't have the scientific knowledge we have today, so the best they could do is make observations with their naked eyes and derive conclusions from them ... and fill in the gaps in knowledge with creative yet intuitive thinking. This also explains why they saw the sky as a vault of sorts, instead of layers of atmosphere surrounding a round planet. Anyway, that was the second day. On the third day, God gathered the water beneath the vault to one place, revealing the earth underneath. I say "reveal" here instead of "create/make" because, according to my understanding of the first verses in the chapter, God had already created the earth. Thus, we have the land and the seas. Then, on the same day, God created plants of various types (including fruit-bearing trees), making the world greener and a more beautiful place. But there was no sun yet ... even though there was already light. So on the fourth day, God created the sun and the moon and the stars. These were all placed within the vault of the sky, the sun being the greatest of the lights, and the moon being a lesser light. Fair enough ... that was their understanding. But one thing that confuses me here is how exactly do these lights separate light from darkness. I don't know, and they never explain in the text how this happens. On the fifth day, God created fish (and other sea/aquatic creatures) of all kinds, and birds ... lots of them. And he really blessed them good. Cool, things are starting to become more vibrant now. Next, on the sixth day, God creates the land animals (you know, elephants, lions, wolves, that kind of stuff), and crawly types (probably referring to insects, spiders, snakes, and such). Also, livestock (cows, sheep, goats, etc.). Finally, God created men and women, all in his image and likeness. And is it any wonder? Man and woman, after all, look so graceful and eminent and thoughtful compared to the animals, that they had to have been created in the likeness of a god. After encouraging them to be fruitful and multiply, God grants them authority to rule over all the other living things on earth, and made sure everyone was happy eating just green plants. It was a world that lacked suffering and cruelty, and it was indeed good. Now satisfied, God decides to have some rest on the seventh day, making it a holy day of observance. It's the ancient Israelite's attempt to explain why they observe the Sabbath. So that's the summary(?) of the text. Some things to note here: In an indirect sense, there is a teleological argument that could be gleaned from the text. Whatever God made, it was good (and this is stated multiple times in the passage). The whole world looked to the ancient as if it was one massive work of art only the amazing divine could have come up with. Later on, in the New Testament, the Apostle Paul attests to the existence of the divine by appealing to the observed wonders of, and in, this world. The ancients looked at the greenery of the trees and the plants, at the liveliness and vibrancy of living beings in the waters and in the skies and on the land, at the fascinatingly distant celestial bodies in the sky, and at each other and themselves, and could only conclude that a magnificent being, or family of beings, were behind all this. Another thing to note is that the God of this passage, creator though he may be, isn't the classical god of philosophy but rather a god with physical form who modeled humans in his own image. Later interpreters would, of course, spiritualize this to mean God made humans in his spiritual image, giving them the capacity to think and know things, to reflect, to have morals, and all that. All in all, still a beautiful read, even as I read this as an atheist. After all, I still remember with fondness that world of fantasies I would always enter as a little kid whenever I was reading the first few chapters of Genesis. There is something surreal (a sense of mysticism) about reading an ancient passage purportedly inspired by the divine and telling "little kid me" a wonderful story of creation of everything in existence around me, with only the mighty God ever having witnessed such a grand event.
The bible clearly shows why the world is a mess, first he created it, then said "let there be light"
So he did it in the dark! That explains a lot!
The meek shall inherit the Earth, the rest of us will fly to the stars.
Never underestimate the power of very stupid people in large groups Arguing with an engineer is like wrestling with a pig in mud ..... after a while you realise that the pig likes it! RE: Atheist Bible Study 1: Genesis
October 15, 2018 at 7:17 am
(This post was last modified: October 15, 2018 at 7:24 am by GrandizerII.)
(October 14, 2018 at 6:03 pm)vulcanlogician Wrote: Awesome thread idea! We'll see. I was initially thinking we go through the whole Old Testament before we hit the New Testament, since there are passages in the New Testament that are better understood in light of the Old Testament. But if that's what enough people want, sure. We'll think about it once we're somewhere near the end of Genesis. Also, feel free to move on to the rest of Genesis 2 (Adam and Eve) before me, guys. I'll do my commentary on it later. Link: Adam and Eve |
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